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Finned
Grasshopper
Trachyrhachys aspera Scudder
Wyoming Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin 912
Species Fact Sheet February 2002 by Robert E. Pfadt
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Geographic range of
Trachyrhachys aspera Scudder |
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Distribution and
Habitat Economic
Importance Food Habits
Migration and
Dispersal Identification
Hatching
Nymphal
Development Adults and
Reproduction Population
Ecology Daily Activity
Selected
References
Distribution and
Habitat
The finned grasshopper inhabits the shortgrass prairie and
to a limited extent the desert prairie and the western edge of the mixedgrass
prairie, ranging from Wyoming and Nebraska to central Mexico. Vegetation of
these grasslands consists of the dominant plant, blue grama grass, several
subdominant grasses, forbs, small shrubs, and much bare ground. During daylight
hours, the finned grasshopper rests and conducts its activities on blue grama
plants and on bare ground; at night it rests on bare ground and ground litter
under canopies of blue grama.
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Economic
Importance Finned grasshoppers feed almost entirely on blue
grama grass, the dominant plant in their habitats and a primary forage plant of
livestock. In recent years, population densities have been low and no known
outbreaks have occurred. Although the Cooperative Economic Insect Survey
recorded damaging numbers of the Kiowa grasshopper, Trachyrhachys kiowa,
for 19 years between 1951 and 1980, the finned grasshopper was not mentioned
once.
Collected from a mixedgrass prairie site in southeast Wyoming,
live weight of six males averaged 202 mg and six females 461 mg (dry weight:
males 59 mg, females 140 mg). The average dry weight of males and females are
similar to those of the bigheaded grasshopper, Aulocara elliotti, a
large and injurious rangeland species. Assuming an equal impact by grasshoppers
of the same size and a density of one young adult finned grasshopper per square
yard, we can estimate an annual loss of 20 pounds (dry weight) of forage per
acre. During an outbreak, rangeland sites harbor assemblages of grasshopper
species in which the finned grasshopper may be present as a subdominant member.
Even the low density of the finned grasshopper during an outbreak contributes
to serious damage of forage.
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Food Habits
The finned grasshopper feeds almost exclusively on blue grama grass. A thrifty
feeder, this grasshopper devours green leaves of blue grama from tip to base.
If a leaf is clipped, the grasshopper holds onto the detached section and
consumes it entirely. A study of the food habits of this grasshopper in the
shortgrass prairie of Colorado revealed that of 13 adults, the crop contents of
12 consisted entirely of blue grama; a single crop had 99 percent blue grama
and 1 percent sand dropseed. In the desert prairie of western Texas, crop
contents consisted of 80 percent blue grama and 20 percent hairy grama, a
closely related species. Two-choice food preference tests of adults collected
from a mixedgrass prairie site in southeast Wyoming showed that blue grama was
clearly preferred to western wheatgrass, red threeawn, downy brome, and
threadleaf sedge.
Observations of feeding behavior of the finned
grasshopper were made in a laboratory cage (1 ft3) provided with sod
translocated from the mixedgrass prairie of southeast Wyoming. A typical
observation was made of a female starved for 19 hours and placed on bare soil
in the cage. She crawled around on the bare soil for three minutes before she
contacted a blue grama plant. She raised up diagonally on the plant and fed on
a green leaf three inches long from tip to base, handling the leaf with her
front tarsi while resting on bare soil with mid and hindlegs. She repeated this
behavior five times. The sixth leaf she cut at one inch level, held onto it,
fed on all of the green portion, and dropped the dry yellow tip. Finally she
fed on the stub of blue grama. The time expended searching and feeding on six
leaves and one stub was 28 minutes. Another female fed in the same manner,
except for picking up an inch section of a fresh blue grama leaf from the soil
surface and consuming all of it. She took 18 minutes from start to end of
feeding.
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Migration and Dispersal
The finned grasshopper's widespread presence in the
shortgrass prairie where it inhabits patches of blue grama grass indicates
effective dispersal. No doubt the species had many centuries to disperse slowly
north upon retreat of the last ice sheet as the climate started to warm some
18,000 years ago. Nevertheless, this grasshopper appears to be a relatively
sedentary species that exhibits faithfulness to favored habitats. Flushed
flight is short (3 to 4 ft), low (4 to 6 in), and silent. Appetitive flights
have never been observed in the two study sites of Colorado and Wyoming.
Because these observations lack sufficient replication and completeness,
conclusions remain tentative until more is learned about this grasshopper's
habits of dispersal.
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Identification
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Figures 1-5.
Appearance of the five nymphal instars of Trachyrhachys aspera - their
sizes, structures and color patterns. Notice progressive development of wing
pads. BL=body length, FL=hind femur length, AS=number of antennal
segments. |
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Fig. 1, First Instar:BL 5.1-5.7 mm FL 2.9-3.2 mm AS
12. |
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Fig. 2, Second Instar:BL 5.7-6.5 mm FL 3.7-4.3 mm AS
14-15. |
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Fig. 3, Third Instar: BL 7.5-9 mm FL 4.4-4.5 mm AS
16-17. |
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Fig. 4, Fourth Instar: BL 9-11 mm FL 5.7-7 mm AS
17-18. |
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Fig. 5, Fifth Instar:Males BL 13 mm FL 8-8.5 mm AS 20.
Females BL 16.7-17 mm FL 8.7-8.8 mm AS 19-20. |
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Figures
6-10,Appearance of adult male and female of Trachyrhachys aspera,
inner side of hind femur of T. aspera above and T. kiowa below,
spread wings of male T. aspera, clutch of 14 eggs. |
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Fig. 6, Adult Male:BL
16.5-17.5 mm FL 10.7-11 mm AS 21-22. |
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Fig. 7, Adult Female:BL 22.5-24.8 mm FL 11.8-13.5 mm AS
21-23. |
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Fig. 8, Inner side hindlegs T. aspera above, T.
kiowa below. |
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Fig. 9, Spread wings of male T.
aspera. |
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Fig. 10, Clutch of eggs
of T. aspera. |
The finned grasshopper is a medium size, brown, mottled gray
and black grasshopper (Fig. 6 and 7). It often occupies the same habitat as the
Kiowa grasshopper which it closely resembles. Several characters serve to
separate the two species. The hindwing of the finned grasshopper is marked by a
large black band that often extends to the apex (Fig. 9), while the hindwing of
Kiowa is mainly transparent.
The posteroventral angle of the pronotal lateral lobe of the
finned grasshopper approximates a right angle, while that of the Kiowa
grasshopper is acute and the lobe distinctly drawn down. The inner (medial)
side of the hind femur of the finned grasshopper is chiefly black marked by one
light transverse bar (Fig. 8), while the Kiowa grasshopper is marked by two
light transverse bars. The hind femur of the finned grasshopper has a high
dorsal keel (fin) (Fig. 7), while the Kiowa grasshopper has a low dorsal keel.
The finned grasshopper has a thin brush of hairs on the lower keel (Fig. 7),
while the Kiowa grasshopper has a dense brush.
The nymphs are identifiable by their shape, structures, and
color patterns (Fig. 1-5).
- Head: face nearly vertical; compound eye with bottom
third dark brown and black, upper two-thirds tan with three dark, diagonal
stripes; antennae filiform, proximally gray, distally black.
- Pronotum: median carina distinct, incised twice;
posteroventral angle of lobe approximating a right angle.
- Hind femur with inner face mainly black, one pale yellow
bar in front of knee (Fig. 8); in instar I the outer surface of the hind femur
is strikingly black except for a light area proximally (Fig. 1); hind tibia
usually black, sometimes gray.
- Body short and robust; color brown with black markings,
venter generally yellow or pale tan, and unspotted.
Nymphs of the finned and Kiowa grasshoppers occupying the
same habitat present a problem of identification. The easiest way of telling
the nymphs apart is to examine the inner face of the hind femur. Nymphs of the
finned grasshopper have the inner face chiefly black with one pale bar in front
of the knee, while the inner femur of the Kiowa grasshopper is less black and
has two pale bars. Also the phenologies of the two species are different; the
finned grasshopper hatches and develops about four weeks later in the season,
but some of the instars overlap.
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Hatching
The finned grasshopper hatches late in the season,
approximately four weeks after Kiowa with which it often shares the same
habitat and overlaps phenologically. In the shortgrass prairie of north central
Colorado (Central Plains Experimental Range, elevation 5,400 ft), hatching
usually begins the first week of July and continues for 7 to 10 days. Farther
south in Trans-Pecos, Texas, hatching occurs at the same time. This event is
delayed in southwest Texas by the sparse amount of spring rainfall and
triggered by adequate amounts falling in June and July.
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Nymphal
Development
In Colorado the nymphs develop during July and the first
half of August when temperatures are at their hottest. The host plant of this
grasshopper, blue grama, remains green and succulent even though other native
grasses may have cured or desiccated. Based on the times of appearance of first
instars (hatching) and first adults, the nymphal period lasts 47 to 58 days
(average 51 days, 1972 to 1975).
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Adults and
Reproduction In northern Colorado the finned grasshopper molts
to the adult stage during the last two weeks of August, the males fledging one
week ahead of females. At this time, the adult stage is also reached farther
south, in Trans-Pecos, Texas (Marathon, Texas elevation 4,121 ft). The adults
are present in their habitats from mid August through October.
Oviposition was not observed in nature and rarely in cages, presumably
because of the secretive behavior of females. In a cubic foot cage into which
blue grama sod had been translocated from the natural habitat, a female was
observed drilling and attempting to oviposit for 60 minutes into a small bare
area (2 sq in) among grama plants. Search of the soil, however, revealed no
eggs. At the end of life of six pairs that had been held individually in six
cages in the laboratory, the sod and soil were examined for eggs. Production
ranged from 1 to 48 eggs per female and averaged 30. The females laid in the
small bare areas between grama plants at depths of 1/4 inch (top eggs of a
clutch) to 1 1/4 inches (bottom eggs). No pod was formed, but a very light
coating of froth enveloped some of the eggs. Number of eggs in a clutch ranged
from 12 to 18. Eggs were 4.6 to 5.2 mm long and yellow to dark brown, some were
two-toned yellow and dark brown (Fig. 10).
An interesting result of the
cage studies was the lack of oviposition by females in the summer of 1999 when
they were exposed daily to 12 hours of light and heat by a 25 watt incandescent
bulb and to daylight entering through southfacing windows. In 2000, the 25 watt
bulb of each cage was programmed for 7 hours on and 17 hours off with light
coming through south-facing windows. Under these conditions each female
produced eggs. We venture that like Melanoplus devastator, maturation
of T. aspera is triggered by declining day lengths of late summer.
Apparently the stimulus of declining photoperiod is also required by
Cordillacris crenulata to develop eggs and oviposit, as this species did
not produce eggs under 12 hours of daily light during adulthood.
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Population
Ecology Collections and observations of the finned grasshopper
in Colorado, Texas, and Wyoming indicate that the species is a subdominant
member of rangeland grasshopper assemblages and survives perennially at low
densities in favorable habitats of shortgrass prairie where blue grama is the
dominant grass. In the longest studied site, the Central Plains Experimental
Range in north central Colorado, sparse populations inhabited shortgrass
prairie annually from 1968 to 1978. From 1972 to 1975 recorded densities ranged
from 0.27 to 0.72 young adults per square yard (Table 1), demonstrating that
like other species of grasshoppers, fluctuations in population density occur.
Subsequent research detected populations from 1980 to 1986 and in 1989 and
1999. In intervening years this rangeland was not searched for grasshoppers.
The evidence indicates a permanent occupation of this shortgrass prairie site
by sparse populations of the finned grasshopper.
Distribution of the
finned grasshopper is spotty in the north of its range, with populations
inhabiting limited acreage of shortgrass prairie. In the study sites in
southeast Laramie County, Wyoming, the population was localized in an
apparently favorable habitat of several acres. In contrast to other species of
grasshoppers, such as Trachyrhachys kiowa which inhabited a much larger
area outside this favorable site, T. aspera was notably absent. A New
Mexico dot map indicates that near the center of its geographical range this
grasshopper is widely distributed over shortgrass prairie, however even here
densities have remained low.
Calculated daily mortality rates of adults
were low (approximately 2 percent) allowing this stage to survive into late
fall-through September and October. Why the species remains numerically low and
a subdominant member of the grasshopper assemblage is an interesting and
important question. One possibility is that females have a low fecundity in
nature like in our cage study. Another possibility is that high egg mortality
may occur during the period following deposition, a time of minimal rainfall.
Because the eggs lie loosely in the soil unprotected by a pod, they may be at
great risk of desiccating.
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Daily
Activity At night finned grasshoppers take shelter on the
ground surface under canopies of blue grama grass. In late August they remain
hidden until two hours after sunrise at which time they crawl out onto bare
ground and begin to bask turning a side perpendicular to the rays of the sun
and lowering the hindleg to expose the abdomen. They bask for 90 minutes to two
hours. During this time, approximately 8 to 10 am DST, the temperatures of the
ground surface may rise from 50°F to 115°F. Still on the bare soil,
they continue sitting, but take postures that reduce insolation and may even
begin to stilt. In the laboratory study, males during late morning were
observed crawling about on blue grama while females usually remained quiet and
hidden from view in the thick of the grass. At various times during the day,
caged males were observed mounted on females and in copulo. Courtship
was brief; stridulating males approached females and when close, approximately
1/2 inch away, they jumped onto the back of females and attempted to mate. When
receptive females were mounted, mating followed. In the southeast Wyoming study
site, a male was observed having mounted a female on 21 August 2000 at 11 :27
am. A caged pair was observed in copulo on 26 August 2000 at 11:30 am.
Finned grasshoppers appear to have low heat tolerance. On clear days
they begin to stilt at 10:40 am (ground temperature 115°F, air 73°F).
Soon afterwards they climb on top of grama grass, approximately 1 inch above
the soil surface; then face the sun directly so that only the front of the head
is impinged while the rest of the body is shaded. They were observed to avoid
high temperatures from morning to late afternoon (10:40 am to 4:30 pm). During
this time no other voluntary activities were observed. The question arises:
when do these grasshoppers feed? A female translocated onto rangeland grama
grass fed after sunset (6:56 pm, 14 September 2000, soil temperature 68°F,
air temperature 67°F). Evidently finned grasshoppers can make adjustments
in the time of their feeding to the temperature flux of their habitat.
Intensive investigation will be required to discover all the details of their
daily activities.
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List of
Species
Selected References
Capinera, J.L. and D.C. Thompson. 1987. Dynamics and
structure of grasshopper assemblages in shortgrass prairie. Can. Entomol. 119:
567-575.
Joern, A. 1979. Resource utilization and community structure
in assemblages of arid grassland grasshoppers (Orthoptera: Acrididae). Trans.
Amer. Entomol. Soc. 105: 253-300.
Joern, A. 1982. Vegetation structure
and microhabitat selection in grasshoppers (Orthoptera: Acrididae).
Southwestern Naturalist 27: 197-209.
Pfadt, R.E. and R. L. Lavigne.
1982. Food habits of grasshoppers inhabiting the Pawnee site. Wyoming Agr. Exp.
Stn. SM 42.
Richman, D.B., D.C. Lightfoot, C.A. Sutherland, and D.J.
Ferguson. 1993. A manual of the grasshoppers of New Mexico, Orthoptera:
Acrididae and Romaleidae. New Mexico State University Handbook 7.
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List
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